“We haven't been able to go up there and assess. It's still moving,” Susana Cruz, a spokeswoman for the California Department of Transportation, told Associated Press. “We have geologists and engineers who are going to check it out this week to see how do we pick up the pieces.”

This weekend’s landslide was just the cap to a series of smaller landslides along the coast in the past few months. The area had already been closed to deal with damages caused by the lesser landslides, so no injuries or damage to equipment was reported.

After five years of drought, a winter of heavy rain and snow in California has sped up coastal erosion around the state. Storms across California have caused $1.3 billion in highway damage over the past year. The year before, that figure was $650 million.